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Gov. Walz tells Redlands-based Esri he’s driven by data – Daily News

A month before he became presumptive Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris’s running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz spoke in Southern California, making the case that a geography geek’s love of data and analysis is the key to effective government.

“What you’re doing here is hard,” Walz told attendees at Esri’s User Conference, held July 15-19 in San Diego. It was one of the last times he spoke publicly before becoming a campaign surrogate and then running mate for Harris. “There is an entire cottage industry (devoted to) dividing people and cynicism. Uniting is much harder. Bringing people together is much harder. The tools of GIS and the science behind this and the ability to communicate make a huge difference.”

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Esri — short for “Environmental Systems Research Institute” — is a Redlands-based software company specializing in geographic information software. GIS software merges maps with other data sets, helping users visualize otherwise difficult-to-spot connections. Esri says its ArcGIS software is used by businesses and governments worldwide.

Walz, a former geography teacher, was announced as Vice President Harris’s choice for running mate on Tuesday, Aug. 6. Three weeks before that happened, Walz addressed his “fellow geographers” in San Diego.

Esri co-founder and President Jack Dangermond referred to Walz as an “amazing person” in his introduction.

A week before, Walz had been at the National Governors Association’s annual conference in Salt Lake City.

But “my peers are in this room,” Walz said in his 35-minute keynote presentation in San Diego. “I’m trained as a geographer and spent over two decades teaching in the public schools — teaching geography.”

Walz grew up in truly small-town Nebraska, with 24 people in his high school graduating class — 12 of them cousins, he said.

He enlisted in the Army two days after his 17th birthday and spent the next 24 years in the Army and the Army National Guard.

“Two things you have to know as an artilleryman: Exactly where you’re at on the Earth’s surface and exactly where everyone else is at on the Earth’s surface,” Walz told the audience.

As a geography teacher in the early 1990s, he encountered Esri’s ArcGIS software at a conference and brought it back to his classroom, where he had students overlay various data sets to a world map.

“My students could tell you when the Holocaust happened, but for them, it was a historical anomaly in time, and they could write it off to monstrous people,” Walz said.

So he pushed his students to look at the world, through data, and find potential future crises.

“They started looking at food insecurity, potential drought, just like the UN was doing around famine early warning. … The capstone project was — this is 1993, for my seniors — was to come up and publish (a report) looking at a global world map with all the layers they’d put in GIS: Where do you think the next genocide is going to be? And they came up with Rwanda. “Twelve months later, the world witnessing the horrific genocide in Rwanda.”